/* This file copied with some minimal changes from mozilla.org */ /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ #include /* ParseFTPList() parses lines from an FTP LIST command. ** ** Written July 2002 by Cyrus Patel ** with acknowledgements to squid, lynx, wget and ftpmirror. ** ** Arguments: ** 'line': line of FTP data connection output. The line is assumed ** to end at the first '\0' or '\n' or '\r\n'. ** 'state': a structure used internally to track state between ** lines. Needs to be bzero()'d at LIST begin. ** 'result': where ParseFTPList will store the results of the parse ** if 'line' is not a comment and is not junk. ** ** Returns one of the following: ** 'd' - LIST line is a directory entry ('result' is valid) ** 'f' - LIST line is a file's entry ('result' is valid) ** 'l' - LIST line is a symlink's entry ('result' is valid) ** '?' - LIST line is junk. (cwd, non-file/dir/link, etc) ** '"' - its not a LIST line (its a "comment") ** ** It may be advisable to let the end-user see "comments" (particularly when ** the listing results in ONLY such lines) because such a listing may be: ** - an unknown LIST format (NLST or "custom" format for example) ** - an error msg (EPERM,ENOENT,ENFILE,EMFILE,ENOTDIR,ENOTBLK,EEXDEV etc). ** - an empty directory and the 'comment' is a "total 0" line or similar. ** (warning: a "total 0" can also mean the total size is unknown). ** ** ParseFTPList() supports all known FTP LISTing formats: ** - '/bin/ls -l' and all variants (including Hellsoft FTP for NetWare); ** - EPLF (Easily Parsable List Format); ** - Windows NT's default "DOS-dirstyle"; ** - OS/2 basic server format LIST format; ** - VMS (MultiNet, UCX, and CMU) LIST format (including multi-line format); ** - IBM VM/CMS, VM/ESA LIST format (two known variants); ** - SuperTCP FTP Server for Win16 LIST format; ** - NetManage Chameleon (NEWT) for Win16 LIST format; ** - '/bin/dls' (two known variants, plus multi-line) LIST format; ** If there are others, then I'd like to hear about them (send me a sample). ** ** NLSTings are not supported explicitely because they cannot be machine ** parsed consistently: NLSTings do not have unique characteristics - even ** the assumption that there won't be whitespace on the line does not hold ** because some nlistings have more than one filename per line and/or ** may have filenames that have spaces in them. Moreover, distinguishing ** between an error message and an NLST line would require ParseList() to ** recognize all the possible strerror() messages in the world. */ /* #undef anything you don't want to support */ #define SUPPORT_LSL /* /bin/ls -l and dozens of variations therof */ #define SUPPORT_DLS /* /bin/dls format (very, Very, VERY rare) */ #define SUPPORT_EPLF /* Extraordinarily Pathetic List Format */ #define SUPPORT_DOS /* WinNT server in 'site dirstyle' dos */ #define SUPPORT_VMS /* VMS (all: MultiNet, UCX, CMU-IP) */ #define SUPPORT_CMS /* IBM VM/CMS,VM/ESA (z/VM and LISTING forms) */ #define SUPPORT_OS2 /* IBM TCP/IP for OS/2 - FTP Server */ #define SUPPORT_W16 /* win16 hosts: SuperTCP or NetManage Chameleon */ struct list_state { void *magic; /* to determine if previously initialized */ time_t now_time; /* current date for year calculation */ struct tm now_tm; /* current date for year calculation */ gint32 lstyle; /* LISTing style */ gint32 parsed_one; /* returned anything yet? */ char carry_buf[84]; /* for VMS multiline */ guint32 carry_buf_len; /* length of name in carry_buf */ guint32 numlines; /* number of lines seen */ }; struct list_result { gint32 fe_type; /* 'd'(dir) or 'l'(link) or 'f'(file) */ const char * fe_fname; /* pointer to filename */ guint32 fe_fnlen; /* length of filename */ const char * fe_lname; /* pointer to symlink name */ guint32 fe_lnlen; /* length of symlink name */ char fe_size[40]; /* size of file in bytes (<= (2^128 - 1)) */ struct tm fe_time; /* last-modified time */ gint32 fe_cinfs; /* file system is definitely case insensitive */ /* (converting all-upcase names may be desirable) */ }; int ParseFTPList(const char *line, struct list_state *state, struct list_result *result );